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Davey Lopes was the successor to Maury Wills as a top base-stealer on the Los Angeles Dodgers. Lopes was, like Wills, a multi-talented infielder who came up at a late age. He would score well on the Bill James test for baseball smarts, since Lopes' batting average, although decent, was the least of his talents. For most of the past 20 years, since 1988, he has been a major league coach and manager.

Lopes is one of relatively few major leaguers from Rhode Island. He is of Cape Verdean descent (this community, from the Portuguese island possession off West Africa, has pockets in various places in New England).

At 5' 9", a relatively short player, he was drafted by the Dodgers at the age of 23. Lopes was primarily an outfielder in his first minor league seasons. He started off at high class A with the Daytona Beach Dodgers and batted .247. The next year, he returned to Daytona Beach and improved to .280/~.399/.439 with 32 steals in 36 tries and 16 outfield assists.

In 1970, Davey was promoted to AAA's Spokane Indians and hit .262/~.339/.382. The next season, he put up a .306/~.384/.433 with 9 triples and 27 steals in 35 tries. Returning for a third year at AAA, Davey batted .317/~.412/.476. He was 8th in the Pacific Coast League in average and led the league with 48 steals (in 58 tries). In his first full season as a second baseman, he led the PCL with 18 errors. He got a September call-up and the next year, 1973, he became a regular on the Dodgers at age 28, hitting .275 with 36 stolen bases.

He became part of the longest-lasting infield of all time, with Steve Garvey, Bill Russell, and Ron Cey. The four played together for approximately ten years.

Lopes was primarily a second baseman, although he also played 239 games in the outfield as well as some games at third base and shortstop. He was a steady hitter who hit between .250 and .285 eleven times. As a lead-off hitter, he drew lots of walks, with a high of 97 in 1979. He had more power than one would expect from a lead-off hitter, with 155 home runs, including a high of 28, also in 1979.

But his forte was the stolen base. His 557 stolen bases put him at # 25 on the all-time list, and he led the National League twice, in 1975 and 1976. His high was 77 stolen bases in 1975. Even as a 40-year-old player for the Chicago Cubs in 1985, he was able to steal 47 bases in 51 attempts while appearing in 99 games.

He appeared in four World Series with the Dodgers (1974, 1977, 1978 and 1981), generally hitting poorly but getting lots of walks. However, the exception was the 1978 Series where he hit .308 with 3 home runs. He also holds the dubious distinction of having the lowest batting average for a player selected to the All-Star Game, batting a scant .169 at the time of his selection for the 1981 All-Star Game. His hitting improved in the second half and he managed to raise his average above the Mendoza Line, finishing the season at .206.

After many years with the Dodgers, he spent 2 3/4 seasons with the Oakland Athletics before being traded to the Cubs in their stretch run toward the 1984 pennant. He stayed with the Cubs in 1985 and most of 1986, hitting for a good average, stealing lots of bases, getting copious walks, and hitting for good power. Toward the end of 1986, the Cubs traded him to the Houston Astros for their run for the pennant, and then he finished out his playing career at the age of 42 with them in 1987.